Description

The purpose of this technique is to allow there to be more audio description than will fit into the gaps in the dialogue of the audio-visual material.

With SMIL 1.0 there is no easy way to do this but it can be done by breaking the audio and video files up into a series of files that are played sequentially. Additional audio description is then played while the audio-visual program is frozen. The last frame of the video file is frozen so that it remains on screen while the audio file plays out.

The effect is that the video appears to play through from end to end but freezes in places while a longer audio description is provided. It then continues automatically when the audio description is complete.

To turn the extended audio description on and off one could use script to switch back and forth between two SMIL scripts, one with and one without the extended audio description lines. Or script could be used to add or remove the extended audio description lines from the SMIL file so that the film clips would just play sequentially.

If scripting is not available then two versions of the video could be provided, one with and one without extended audio descriptions.

The markup above is broken into five <par> segments. In each, there is a <video> and an <audio> tag (the last <par> has no <audio> tag intentionally). The convention with extended audio descriptions is that the main media pauses during the description. The way to make this happen in SMIL 1.0 is to set a "clip-begin" and "clip-end" which dictate the start and end of the video clip, and to set a duration for the clip that is longer than what is defined by the "clip-begin" and "clip-end". The fill="freeze" holds the last frame of the video during the extended description. The <audio> tag has a "begin" attribute with a value that is equal to the "clip-end" value of the preceding <video> tag.

The way to determine the values for "clip-begin," "clip-end", and "dur" is to find out the time the portion of the video before the audio description starts and ends, and to find out the total length of the extended audio description. The "clip-begin" and "clip-end" define their own values, but the "dur" value is the sum of the length of the extended description and the clip defined by the "clip-begin" and "clip-end". In the first <par>, the video clip starts at 0 seconds, ends and 5.4 seconds, and the description length is 3.3 seconds, so the "dur" value is 5.4s + 3.3s = 8.7s.